Aside from Jobs just living there, he also built the first 100 Apple computers right in the garage.

Steve Jobs' childhood home.

The first 50 he sold to Paul Terrell’s Byte Shop in Mountain View for $500. (The originals are now worth much more than that. One sold for $213,000 at a 2010 auction.)

According to the Commission’s property evaluation, in the same home, first investors such as Chuck Peddle of Commodore Computer and Don Valentine of Sequoia Capital visited the property for demonstrations of the first Apple computers.According to the evaluation, the property is so monumental because it “represents the fourth wave (of progress in Silicon Valley) where youngsters working in their respective garages were experiments with electronics and the new computer industry as tools for human use.”

The single-story ranch-style house is very different from the ones that succeeded it.